A Muslim family fled their hometown after enduring a campaign of Islamophobic abuse and intimidation, they have revealed.

Ayesha Abdol-Hamid, 23, was a teenager when her parents made the decision to leave Skewen, Neath Port Talbot and start a new life in Cardiff.

An organisation which supports Muslims has warned of a rise in Islamophobic hate crime in Wales.

Welsh police received 63 complaints of hate crimes against Muslims last year.

But the number of incidents is likely to be far higher because 43% of victims do not report hate crimes due to a lack of confidence in the police, said Sahar Al-Faifi, manager of Muslim Engagement & Development (MEND) in Wales and west England.

In the last two years, Ms Al-Faifi said MEND had dealt with 418 cases of Islamophobic hate crime in Wales and England.

Warning: This article contains racist language

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Sahar Al-Faifi said MEND had dealt with 418 cases of Islamophobic hate crime in Wales and the west of England in the last two years

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Ms Abdol-Hamid's mother, Shahida Nasreen Kahn said it broke her heart knowing Ayesha and her brother were going to school and being racially abused.

"It was really heartbreaking because they are innocent," said Ms Nasreen Kahn.

"I heard children calling her names from the window."

Asked whether there was any lasting damage, she replied: "You carry it with you; it doesn't go away."

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It was "heartbreaking" knowing her children were on the receiving end of racist abuse, Ms Nasreen Kahn said

After the threatening phone call, which came in 2010, Ms Nasreen Kahn said she "felt we had to run away".

Despite feeling safer in Cardiff due to its more multicultural population, both women said they had noticed a rise in Islamophobia in recent years.

Ms Al-Faifi said Muslim women are more likely to be victims of Islamophobic hate crime, and that it could have a lasting impact on their lives.

"I am visibly Muslim and I am a woman of colour, so I have faced triple discrimination against my gender, my faith and my race," she said.

"[Muslim women] might feel safe most of the time but it only takes one incident to knock that confidence.

"It is really sad because what we want to see is women who are confident and participating in public life - working, integrating into society - but it only takes one incident to ruin the whole thing."

She added: "The issue is multi-faceted. It's a communal issue, it's a political issue and it's a police issue, and unless we, as a Welsh society, work collectively to tackle it, it will not disappear."